Archival irruptions: constructing religion and criminalizing Obeah in eighteenth-century Jamaica

"In Archival Irruptions, Katharine Gerbner offers a new method for reading colonial and missionary archives by focusing on "irruptions," moments when marginalized epistemologies break through the narrative field of a Eurocentric archive. Through a microhistory of the Moravian archive...

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Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:Constructing religion and criminalizing Obeah in eighteenth-century Jamaica
Main Author: Gerbner, Katharine 1983- (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Interlibrary Loan:Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany)
Published: Durham Duke University Press 2025
In:Year: 2025
Series/Journal:Religious cultures of African and African diaspora people
Further subjects:B Obeah (Cult) (Jamaica) History 18th century
B Witchcraft History (Jamaica)
B Black people (Jamaica) Religion History
B Black people ; Religion
B Witchcraft ; History
B Religions African influences
B Obeah (Cult) History 18th century (Jamaica)
B Cults (Jamaica) History
B 1700-1799
B Cults History (Jamaica)
B Cults ; History
B Religion and sociology (Jamaica) History
B Religions ; African influences
B Religion and sociology ; History
B Witchcraft (Jamaica) History
B Jamaica
B Religion and sociology History (Jamaica)
B Obeah (Cult)
B Black people Religion History (Jamaica)
Description
Summary:"In Archival Irruptions, Katharine Gerbner offers a new method for reading colonial and missionary archives by focusing on "irruptions," moments when marginalized epistemologies break through the narrative field of a Eurocentric archive. Through a microhistory of the Moravian archive from Jamaica, Gerbner shows how scholars can utilize colonial and missionary sources to tell Africana stories. Reading for irruptions offers insight into the Afro-Caribbean practice of Obeah before the practice was deemed a crime. Obeah, which developed in the British Caribbean under slavery, was criminalized as witchcraft by the British colonial government in the wake of Tacky's Revolt, the largest enslaved uprising in the eighteenth-century British Atlantic World. While historians often view Obeah through the lens of European categories such as religion or superstition, reading for irruptions reveals a new story about Obeah, Christianity, and criminalization. Archival Irruptions argues that we must reckon with the legacies of slavery to understand how some religious practices have been, and continue to be, excluded from the lexicon of religion and criminalized. Reading colonial and missionary archives for irruptions offers one method to address the history of epistemic violence and re-center the lives, experiences, and perspectives of those who have been targeted by systemic repression and criminalization"--
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references and index
Physical Description:pages cm
ISBN:978-1-4780-3240-3
978-1-4780-2903-8